Yes it is.
Yes.
I believe there are 3 stuctures. The molecule can only resonate through 3 of its Oxygens while the last one holds the hydrogen. So you have S in the middle 4 Oxygens around it. 1. Oxygen 1 has the hydrogen and has a single bond to the S. Oxygen 2 has a double bond to the S, Oxygen 3 has a single bond to the S (and a negative charge), and Oxygen 4 has a double bond to the S. 2. Same as before but this time Oxygen 3 has the double bond and Oxygen 2 has the single bond and the extra lone pair (negative charge) 3. Same thing except Oxygen 4 now has the single bond and negative charge and Oxygen 2 has the a double bond. The Oxygen with the hydrogen attached should always be single bonded as well as one other Oxygen. The other 2 oxygens are double bonded. I hope that makes sense, it's hard to explain when you can't draw it.
Covalent paramagnetic. nitrogen has a full bond with each oxygen atom, as well as a paramagnetic bond with the oxygen atoms.
Oxygen likes to form single or double bonds. However it does form a triple bond in the case of CO (That is the only triple bond occurance to my knowledge)
Oxygen can form 2 bonds.
Ethylene has 4 single bonds (carbon to hydrogen) and 1 double bond (carbon to carbon).
No,they are no single bonds.There is a double bond.
The single bond length between oxygen and phosphorus is 176 picometers but I am unsure of the double bond length.
There are two oxygen double bonded to one carbon. DOUBLE BOND.
A single vs. a double oxygen bond. Oxygen only has a double oxygen bond. Ozone has one of each.
This compound makes a double covalent bond between nitrogen and oxygen.
I believe there are 3 stuctures. The molecule can only resonate through 3 of its Oxygens while the last one holds the hydrogen. So you have S in the middle 4 Oxygens around it. 1. Oxygen 1 has the hydrogen and has a single bond to the S. Oxygen 2 has a double bond to the S, Oxygen 3 has a single bond to the S (and a negative charge), and Oxygen 4 has a double bond to the S. 2. Same as before but this time Oxygen 3 has the double bond and Oxygen 2 has the single bond and the extra lone pair (negative charge) 3. Same thing except Oxygen 4 now has the single bond and negative charge and Oxygen 2 has the a double bond. The Oxygen with the hydrogen attached should always be single bonded as well as one other Oxygen. The other 2 oxygens are double bonded. I hope that makes sense, it's hard to explain when you can't draw it.
The covalent bond in diatomic oxygen is a double bond and is stronger than the single covalent bond in diatomic chlorine.
The covalent bond in diatomic oxygen is a double bond and is stronger than the single covalent bond in diatomic chlorine.
Covalent paramagnetic. nitrogen has a full bond with each oxygen atom, as well as a paramagnetic bond with the oxygen atoms.
No. The two carbon to oxygen bonds are both double bonds.
The bond in O2 is a double bond, meaning two pairs of electrons are shared between two atoms. Double bonds are shorter than single bonds because of the second electron pairs presence over the single bond. This pulls the atoms closer together.
The molecule of oxygen has a double bond: O=O.